The term Danish Functionalism is sometimes used
to describe the Danish branch of functionalistic architecture which had its
heyday in the 1960s.

Danish Functionalists focused primarily on functionality at the expense of
aesthetics and produced a number of buildings that are characterized by
straight angles, flat roofs, and a kind of roughness provided by the
minimally decorated concrete slabs that the buildings themselves are made
of. Possibly the most well known example of the Danish Functionalist style
is the University of Aarhus, which is the design of Architect C.F. Møller.